An occasional serving of fresh thoughts on life in Christ from Rob Freshour, Senior Pastor of the Highland Community Church in Highland, Michigan.
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Yes, Angels, Really
Trusting Our Treasure
In the past few weeks I have lost over 40 percent of my retirement. Ouch! And the financial news today sounds terribly familiar – “second verse; same as the first; a little bit louder; a little bit worse.”
As I watch my annuity shrivel before my eyes, a chorus of concerns assail me. Thankfully, I still have some time to recoup these losses before retirement begins to be a reality on my horizon. Should I make a dramatic change in my portfolio or stay the course? Conventional wisdom convinces me to be patient and keep my confidence in the bigger picture.
Bigger picture? Is the bigger picture really only as far down the road as I can see? Do I really believe my retirement plans frame the bigger picture? When all is said and done here, isn’t the bigger picture actually far greater than the span of years I struggle for oxygen in these shadowlands? Indeed, Jesus Christ says:
Don't collect for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal. But collect for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys, and where thieves don't break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also (Matthew 6:19-21).
Three questions leap from Jesus’ assertion to challenge me:
1. Do I trust my treasures to the good will of moths, rust, and thieves?
Understand: money and stuff do matter. I do not believe God intends for us to forsake the world and live in caves. Jesus calls His disciples to be “in the world, but not of the world” (John 17:15-19). I am convinced He created us with appetites and capacities for pleasure and enjoyment and fulfillment.
The stuff we cherish, that which we hold dear in this world – money, stuff, significance, relationships, etc. – are actually gifts from God. They are hints, suggestions, foretastes of the glorious gratification we will enjoy in Heaven. The chief reason He created us with these facilities is that we would ultimately find all our satisfaction in Him.
It is not wrong to enjoy things in this life. We must be careful, however, not to confuse the gifts with the Giver, to crave the streams more than the Source, to settle for temporary delight over eternal joy. Moreover, we must be careful not to trust these treasures to failed systems (“where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal”).
We have precious friends here in this church who treasure money and homes and family in the right way. For the most part, they have treasured these valuables by trusting them to God. In recent months, however, they have seen money disappear, houses and property devalued, and loved ones depart, die, or deeply disappoint them (another more painful form of death). I am so proud of how these dear brothers and sisters in Christ have responded to their pain and loss. Through terrible tears and trials that have trusted God with their hearts and all they hold dear. They grieve and carry on with life-giving hope, with steadfast confidence in our Father’s love and power and purpose.
2. How do I trust my treasures to Heaven’s Trustee?
I love the words of our Lord Jesus: “Don't be afraid, little flock, because your Father delights to give you the kingdom” (Luke 12:32). God says, “Don’t be afraid. Stop worrying. Stop fretting.” He invites us to rest safe and sound in these timeless truths:
He is our Shepherd. Our Good Shepherd feeds, leads, and protects us. He lays down His life for us (John 10:11)!
He is our Father. We are not merely His livestock. We are His children! What a love (1 John 3:1)!
He is the King – the kingdom is His to give. He has power and authority to do what He says He will do!
He gives us the kingdom. We do not have to earn it. He is generous and free with His provision and protection.
He delights to give us the kingdom. God thoroughly enjoys caring for us. He finds pleasure in this!
3. Where is my heart? What is the state of my heart, of my affections, of my satisfaction?
Hear Jesus again:
What I'm trying to do here is get you to relax, not be so preoccupied with getting so you can respond to God's giving. People who don't know God and the way He works fuss over these things, but you know both God and how He works. Steep yourself in God-reality, God-initiative, God-provisions. You'll find all your everyday human concerns will be met. Don't be afraid of missing out. You're my dearest friends! The Father wants to give you the very kingdom itself.
Be generous. Give to the poor. Get yourselves a bank that can't go bankrupt, a bank in heaven far from bankrobbers, safe from embezzlers, a bank you can bank on. It's obvious, isn't it? The place where your treasure is, is the place you will most want to be, and end up being” (Luke 12:29-34, The Message).
Friend, if we would have peace in the storms today, we must trust, invest, even dare to risk our eternal capital, in the One Who is Faithful and True. His city streets are paved with gold – that so treasured by earthlings is like common asphalt in heaven! Now, that’s the place I want most to be. In fact, that’s where Christ-followers already reign (Ephesians 2:4-10)!
A Word from Our Sponsor (Actually Five Words)
“And now, a word from our sponsor …”
That phrase always takes me back to safer, happier, blach-and-white days. I remember safer television programming. I remember sitting on the floor with my dad watching Gunsmoke or Wagon Train, when a strong, confident voice would chime in: “And now, a word from our sponsor …”
“Daddy, what’s a sponsor?”
“The sponsor underwrites the program we are watching.”
“Who’s Borox? Did they write this show?”
“No, the underwriter, or sponsor, pays for this show to be on TV. Because they pay for the airtime, the sponsor reserves the right to promote their products during commercial breaks.”
Well, I don’t want to try to make this introductory metaphor “walk on all fours.” I simply want to draw our attention this morning to the One Who sponsors us. He stands before God as our Advocate and refutes the accusations of our adversary. He sponsors us before Holy God. He has paid the bill so that we can enjoy “heir” time with God as our Father in Heaven. And from time to time, He reserves the right to promote Himself and the products a relationship with Him offers to anyone who will receive His sponsorship.
“And now, a word from our sponsor …”
I have come to a place where I value “a word from our sponsor.” In fact, some days I am desperate to hear from Him, to be reminded of His love and power and presence. I am so glad that out Sponsor is not only heard in Heaven before Father’s throne, but He also continues to speak on earth, He continues to promote the benefits He has made available to all who believe and receive Him.
Recently, I found a powerful instance in Scripture when our Sponsor presented just such a word. In Acts 18, I found another powerful picture from Scripture of a heroic leader gripped by real despair who found great hope from God and His Word. The apostle Paul, arguably the greatest figure in the New Testament after Jesus Christ (and perhaps John the Baptist), came to a surprising crossroads in his walk with Jesus in Acts 18. In Acts 18:9, Jesus Himself comes to Paul and speaks to him.
Then the Lord said to Paul in a night vision, “Don’t be afraid, but keep on speaking and don’t be silent. For I am with you, and no one will lay a hand on you to hurt you, because I have many people in this city” (Acts 18:9-10).
We need to appreciate Paul’s condition here to get the full impact of Jesus’ word to him. Essentially, Paul is in some sort of fearful state. The literal translation of the phrase “Don’t be afraid” is “Stop fearing.” So, apparently, Paul is distressed. Why was Paul anxious?
Paul is in
Paul is also alone. He comes to
Paul is probably wounded and weary. On this second missionary adventure he has been stripped, beaten with rods, and shackled in stocks
Acts 18:7-8 indicate the ministry begins to flourish at this time in
Now against this backdrop, God has been caring for Paul all along. In fact, if he were paying attention, Paul could already have heard God comfort him with two remarkable realities. First, when Paul comes to this strange, immoral, pagan city alone, God has already arranged for him a place to stay with a godly couple – a Jewish man named Aquila and his noble Roman wife, Priscilla (Acts 18:1-4). Before, or perhaps just as Paul was setting out with Silas on this second missionary journey, the Emperor had expelled the Jews from
So, God was saying, “Paul, I make ‘all things work together for the good of those who love God: those who are called according to His purpose’ (Romans 8:28). In fact, Paul, I was making plans for you here in
Then, in Acts 18:5, Silas and Timothy finally catch up to Paul in
God was saying, “Paul, I make ‘all things work together for the good of those who love God: those who are called according to His purpose’ (Romans 8:28). In fact, Paul, I have continued to work in the lives of my people even in your absence. Not only have I gone before you where you have not yet been, Paul, but I also go behind where you have already been and see to the fulfillment of My Word in their lives.”
By this time, the fearsome foursome have brought their considerable weight to bear upon the apostle’s heart. Fatigue, frustration, failure, and fear have made it difficult for Paul to recognize God’s activity and provision. So, Jesus Himself – the same Jesus Who appeared to Paul and knocked him off his high horse into the dirt on the road to Damascus to set him on Heaven’s highway some 17 years earlier (Acts 9) – this very Lord Jesus appears to Paul again to pull him up out of the dust of despair and get him back in the saddle again.
God had demonstrated His commitment to make “all things work together for the good of those who love God: those who are called according to His purpose” (Romans 8:28). He had shown Paul that this work includes God working where we have not yet been to prepare the way for us. He had also proven this work includes God working where we have already been to secure the integrity of His promise in the lives of those we have left behind. Now, God declares that this work includes His presence in our present!
“Don’t be afraid, but keep on speaking and don’t be silent. For I am with you, …”
Here are five wonderful words from our Sponsor in this text (Actually an outline of a sermon from Acts 18:1-17):
- Stop being afraid.
- Continue to Speak and do not be silent.
- Trust Jesus to be present in your future, past, and present.
- Throw off restraint in His service.
- Find His people yet unfound (lost) in your proximity.
Rules for Intersections: A Thought about This Political Season
When I was a little boy learning to cross the street, I received some timeless guidance: Stop. Look both ways. Proceed with caution.
Later, when I was learning to drive, we applied those same three simple rules to intersections: Stop. Look both ways. Proceed with caution.
Today, three extraordinarily busy intersections require the same sage advice. The three crossroads are the intersections of
The presidential and vice-presidential debates leave me wondering who is telling the truth? Their presentations abound with obscenely large numbers, gratuitous claims of impressive track records, and nearly scandalous accusations of their opponents’ same records.
Recent financial news highlights the dangers resident at the corner of Wall Street and
One of the most confusing intersections has been where
What if Church and State Streets are actually partners, corridors that may even share the same pavement from time to time? What if our failure to navigate and direct our people with better sense and cooperation along these foundational paths is the culprit that has produced the violent congestion at these other intersections?
Over the years, I have learned that safe passage through busy intersections often requires aids and guides. Children learn to cross the street at the corner under the direction of a monitor or, even better, with their hands in Mom or Dad’s hands. Traffic flows more safely and freely when facilitated by volume-appropriate directors – Yield or Stop signs, stoplights, or a police officer directing traffic.
Here’s the best direction I can find for crossing the intersections we face today: “Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord” (Psalm 33:12).
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
How To Help My Son
My youngest son is not excited about going back to school. I suppose this is common for kids this time of year. Earlier bed times and morning risings, homework, and the like would certainly make the return to school less popular. Still, many kids are a little eager to be back with their friends again. That’s the rub for my son.
My son says he does not have any friends at school. He confides to us that most kids make fun of him or pick on him, and the few kids he calls friends often use bad language that makes him feel uncomfortable. For him, school is a lonely world where he feels isolated and awkward.
Honestly, I don’t get it. Here’s a boy who loves God, prays and reads the Bible on his own every morning, honors his parents, earns good grades, dreams of serving God and country, hugs every member of the family every night before he goes to bed, and will test for his black-belt in Tae Kwon Do within the year? What’s not to love?
People can be cruel, to be sure, but that’s seed for another discussion. How can we help our son now? Here are seven steps we continue to take to that end this school year. We will …
1. … love him unconditionally. He will know he is valuable and cherished. Let that love be the level place where he finds courage, confidence, and competence.
2. … pray for him without ceasing.
3. … pray with him about the problem and for the kids who give him a rough time.
4. … learn God’s Word, will, and ways alongside our son. God knows a thing or two about love and purpose in the face of undeserved rejection.
5. … listen to him and not pass off his hurt as illegitimate or childish. But even in pain we can find great gain.
6. … encourage him to keep the main things the main things and celebrate with him the markers that indicate he is growing and becoming an even more remarkable person.
7. … train him to live respectfully, productively, even joyfully counter to any culture that de-values truth and honor. We will help him be heroic – a winsome and courageous light in the darkness, and a helpful servant-leader to his peers.
Pastor Rob
My Great Risk

What do these heroes have in common? What about them makes us want to be like them? I think it is their apparent self-sufficiency, their independence. We men especially seem to value rugged individualism. Life with my wife and daughters has trained me not to presume expertise about what women value and why. To us men, however, heroic manhood is embodied by these autonomous, iconic figures who do not need anybody or anything but their own wit and grit.
What if we’re wrong? What if the truly manly man is not only desperately dependent but also painfully aware of his insufficiencies? Enter one of the most magnificent models of manhood ever to cast his shadow on the earth. Enter David – son of Jesse, King of Israel, a man after God’s own heart. As a teenager he killed a bear and a lion … and a giant warrior named Goliath with a sling and stones. He knew what it meant to live in barren wilderness and to lead a large company of battle-tested patriots in victorious campaigns – victory being defined by the annihilation of his enemies by his own hands. Somehow, I think David could more than hold his own against the likes of John Wayne. (The Duke’s real name was Morris, after all! Talk about a cover up! What was he trying to hide?)
What makes David most heroic, though, is not his self-sufficiency, his expertise in warfare, or his leadership skills. Here is a man who not only felt the same fatigue, frustration, fear, and failure we experience, but he succumbed to the doubt, despair, and depression these anti-masculine realities produce in us all. He bares his soul for all to see in many of the songs (yes, songs) he composed. Psalm 42 is perhaps the most prolific portrait of his absolute dependence upon God.
Are you weary, as I am, of trying to be Braveheart or Bond or Bauer? Then take some time – real time away from activity and business – and sit down with David and God and Psalm 42. Learn from a real-life hero that real men fail and flail and cry and cry out to God. Real men, genuine leaders of men – including pastors – know they are flawed and insufficient in themselves ever to amount to much of real worth. They know they are most successful when they do not attempt to pretend otherwise, but “wholly lean in Jesus’ name.”
I am going to risk some stuff today with this article. I am going to risk my reputation. I am going to risk your opinion of pastors and of me as your pastor. In fact, I am going to risk the safe ground for a higher ground, a more adventurous and more fulfilling ground, to be sure, but also a less-charted and more dangerous ground.
As I take this risk, I am aware that some people may not appreciate my transparency. Some people may find in what you are about to read confirmation of their suspicions about me – “He’s not all that smart or effective or …” whatever. Some folks may feel threatened. This is my risk – not yours … yet. Of course, some people already know what I am about to say is true and will be glad I am finally beginning to come around.
Three reasons I am willing to take this risk:
1. I believe the risk is part of the cure. Only the broken can be healed.
2. I believe some of you may need to take similar risks. In fact, every one of us must hazard this risk if we ever hope to find the joy and purpose and satisfaction for which we were created to find in God and God alone.
3. I believe God is somehow pleased and honored when I risk these things in order to gain Him. In other words, like Paul, I count these things I risk as not even remotely comparable to the value of finding my complete satisfaction in God. And, remember, “God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him.”
Okay, here’s the risk. Here’s my confession: I have fallen into depression and felt almost totally immobilized by it. Like David, “I am deeply depressed” (Psalm 42:6, HCSB). (Gasp). How can a Christ-follower, and a professional at that, claim truly to trust God yet be depressed?
In their helpful resource, The Minister’s Little Devotional Book, HB London and Stan Toler observed: “Depression is usually a symptom of another problem. … Fatigue, frustration, fear, and failure can quickly move God’s ministers from the highs of Mount Carmel to the lows of a broom tree” (1 Kings 18:1-19:5). That’s me in spades this summer. I am fatigued. I am frustrated. I am afraid. And I feel very much like a failure.
What are you to do with this risk on my part? Well, pray with me and for me. Please, do not pity me (Yuck!). Perhaps learn with me how God can use depression in believers’ lives. Consider depression as one of the “all things” God “works together for our good” (Romans 8:28). Although our enemy surely meant it for evil, Father allows it for our benefit. Here’s one such benefit: When we are depressed, we are wondrously near that place of absolute abandonment and sweetest surrender. We have come to the end of ourselves and are most receptive, desperately so, to find our hope and satisfaction in Christ alone.
Finally, also like David, in my depression I will put my hope in God, “for I will still praise Him, my Savior and my God” (Psalm 42:5, 11). I will sing again and be joyful again and shout thankfully again, because He is faithful! Hallelujah!
Pastor Rob
Saturday, July 5, 2008
Happy Is the Nation
For many Americans, July 4 is a holiday of remembrance. We think on our nation’s history and the bravery of the Second Continental Congress who approved a Resolution of Independence on July 2 proposed by Richard Lee of
I was determined to see how they all looked as they signed what might be their death warrant. I placed myself beside the secretary, Charles Thomson, and eyed each closely as he affixed his name to the document. Undaunted resolution was displayed in every countenance.
Similarly, Benjamin Franklin is oft-credited to have quipped: “We must all hang together, or most assuredly we shall hang separately.” So, many of us remember Independence Day with respect to their “undaunted resolution” as a day to honor heroes, to remember our history, and to remind one another to continue to cherish and to keep secure certain self-evident, God-given, “unalienable rights” such as “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”
Of course, 232 years later we recognize that Independence Day now means a number of other things to our citizens. The date signals a longer weekend for excursions like picnics, fireworks, and barbeques. For a startling number of younger residents, “Independence Day” is a 1996 sci-fi blockbuster with some sort of enigmatic reference to July 4. How quickly and subtly our memories can be trained to forget or regard lightly the freedoms we enjoy because of the courage and sacrifice of our founders!
In 1905, George Santayana wrote:
Progress, far from consisting in change, depends on retentiveness. When change is absolute there remains no being to improve and no direction is set for possible improvement: and when experience is not retained, as among savages, infancy is perpetual. Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
When we fail not only to remember our heritage but also to remind our children of our history, we surrender our future to the worst enemies of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” Those enemies include the neglect and ignorance of truth and enslavement to self-indulgence. When we forget the lessons forged by lives that produced “undaunted resolution” in the face of certain struggle, perhaps even to the point of death, we lose the firm grounding, the confident convictions that yielded that resolve. Courageous men and women of conviction typically found such solid footing on the principles and propositions of God’s Word, and so may we.
For instance, the Bible declares: “Happy is the nation whose God is the Lord” (Psalm 33:12). We would do well today not only to reflect the character of our nation’s forefathers, but also to learn and govern our own lives on the same truths that molded that character. “Happy is the nation whose God is the Lord.” If we would continue to pursue happiness, to enjoy liberty, and to cherish life, then we should understand the only true Source for these aims is God.
“Happy is the nation whose God is the Lord.” What does this really mean, anyway? Consider the verse in context. I suggest you take time to read and ponder Psalm 33. But for the moment, focus on these three verses, Psalm 33:10-12.
10 The Lord frustrates the counsel of the nations;
He thwarts the plans of the peoples.
11 The counsel of the Lord stands forever,
the plans of His heart from generation to generation.
12 Happy is the nation whose God is the Lord –
the people He has chosen to be His own possession!
Why would God frustrate the counsel of the nations or thwart the plans of the peoples? Well, have you taken a close look at the current counsel of the nations or plans of the peoples? God allows nations to confer and people to make plans because He wants humanity to make good choices. The wisest choices always begin with a choice to know the only plans and purposes guaranteed to prevail and to secure the kind of satisfying joy for which we were all fashioned in the first place. John Piper writes:
The point of these verses is that both men and God take counsel, and both plan. But in the end it is not the counsel and plans of men that are established, but of God's. It is all-important to realize that God plans the world and He plans churches and He plans lives – and His plans succeed. His plans take precedence over our plans. Our plans have significance and durability to the degree that God plans for our plans to be significant and durable. God is the all-important reality in planning from beginning to end. God's will is for that to be known, to be explicit, to be admired and enjoyed (John Piper, “The Counsel of the Lord Stands Forever,” June 12, 1994).
What is the measure of your resolve? As another July 4 weekend concludes, I urge you to renew your personal Declaration of Dependence (not a typo). Declare with me a total dependence upon the Lord God, Whose purposes prevail and are always right and true and powerful and joyful. I will find my “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” as His possession.